IT LL RAILWAY 4, In CONNECTION With an Pacific Railway LOW RATES To PACIFIC) COAST AND RETURN. ood Returning Until October Blst. - VANCOUVER -.. dy VICTORIA : Z $95.80 PORTLAND - .. BXCURSTONS to SEATTLE .... FARM LABORERS: Yanitoba, Saskatchewan and "Alberta; 300 going trip, $15.00 additional for | Doorn. leaving dabes Adgust 20th, <nd, 27th, and Sept. 2nd, "11th and Lath, 4 Going dates August 18th, Sept. 1st, B5th 'and 29th, Tickets © good for 60 | days. . ' | Full particulars at K. & P. Ry Ticket. Office, Ontario See F, CONWAY, Gen, Pass. Agent. and C.P, | "hone, 50, | BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY Train union "station, Ontario « daily (Sundays excepted, Sydenham, Napanee, Deser- onto, Bumnbekburn and all points north To secure quick déspatch to Bannock- burn, Maynooth, and points on Central Ontario, youte your shipments via Bay of Quinte Railway. For further particu lars, apply to R. W. DICKSON, Agent. 'Phone, No. 3. Quebec Steamship Company I LIMITED. Rivard Gulf of St. Lawrence Summer Cruises in Cool Latitudes S88. "Campana," electric bells and Twin Screw Iron wih electric lights, all modern comfort, SAILS FROM MONDAYS, at 4 jp August, 7th and. 21st September, for Pictou, N.S., calling at Quebec, Uaspe, Mal Bay, Perce, Grand River, Summerside, P11. and Charlottetown, P.E.I. nt NEW YORK FROM QUEBEC Calling at Charlottetown and Halilax, 8.8, Trinidad, 2,600 tons, sails from Quebec, 22nd August. Bermuda Summer 'Excursions, $40 and upwards, by the T'win Screw SS. "Bermudian," 5,500 tens. Sailing fortnightly from New York, from 2nd June .to Hth October. Temperature cooled by sean breezes seldom rises above B0 degrees. The finest trips of the season for health and comfort. ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary, Quebec. For tickets and staterooms, apply to JU. P. HANLEY, or C. S., KIRKPAT- RICK, Ticket Agenls, Kingston, Ont. -------- 4 -------- Special Excursion Fares to the Seaside e Maritime Express leaves Modtreal 12.00 noon daly except Saturday. Ocean limited leaves Montreal 7.30 p.m, daily except Saturday. FROM MONTREA wd 7.50 . 50 50 Ho 50 9.00 9.00 9.00 Rivere du Loup Murray Bay Cap. a + Aigle St. Irene . Cacouna 'Bic STa1el 37 Metis Rimouski Campbellton | IE Dalhousie Moncton St. John, Shediac .... » vial Summerside, 1.1 Charlottetown, P.E.I. Parrshoro, N.S. isi we Halifax .. ese as os J ! : | Pictou .... { Mulgrave he i ae . North Sydney .............. St. Johns, Nfld. ........ Going August 10, 11, 159. turning August 31st, 19087 For excursion fares from Toronto add | #12 to the above. Proportionally low | fares from points fn Ontario. : Our illustrated booklet, "Tours to Sum- mer Haunts," tells of the places men-| tioned above. Weite for. free copies te i Toronto Ticket Office, 51 King - street East. General Passenger Dept... Moncton, N.I3 Bl noes | | 3, re- | dandeafi Comfortabled? he Year there's a fabric of the right "feel" and weight in Pen-Angle to make you most comfortable. ' Goods trade-marked with the Pen. Angle in red are sold to you with w id (= el (IG TCT Vy DOMINION BREWERY <0 LIMITED, TORONTO. Celebrated White 3 XXX Porter Invalid Stout Every Cork Branded RIGNEY & HICKEY 136 & 138 Princess St. PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST. Contes 00 Atzn, Acme, Lime, Phssobtes, or aa nari, E W. GILLETT 2oMrany LIMITED TORONTO, ONT. HAIR WON'T FALL OUT. You Kill the Dandruff Germ With the New Treatment. John Fuller, .a well-known eiti- en of Colfax, Wash., savs "I. had dandruff so badly that it caked on my scalp. Herpicide completely cured me. Geor H. McWhirk, of Walla Walla, Wash., says' "Herpicide com- of 'a bad cas of thirty years' standing.- Ihéy took the only really treatment, a remedy th @estroys the dandruff Newhto's = Herpicide. Stop dandruff, "hiv won't fall but will grow naturally; luxuriantly Allays mstantly and makes hair soft, ag: silk, One hottle any doubter of its merits, Sold by in stamps cide Cas; and $l pletely cured me of sensible germ out, itching ans will convince lossy ading drug: ists. Send 100 for sample The trott; Mich: wo sizes; He; WW. Mahood, special to 3 % HG $10 --Farm Laborers' Excursion Kingston to MANITOBA, AL ASKATCHEWAN via Chicago Paul, Minneapolis or Duluth, Auguss 20, 27, September 2, « Fare of $10.00 is to Whnipeg, where tickets will be given to umgack, Sask. Swan River, Sask, and mtermedtate points on Canadian Northgfn Ry. One cent per mile beyond th8® points to Fdmonton, inclusive. The Grand Trunk track route to the west, through Clair Tunnel hy electricity. No Smoke. No dust. Tickets will be sued for the return from Swan River, Kamsack and intermediate stat jons for $18.04, Tickets -will also be issued via Tordhto and C.P.R. or North Bay and C.P.R., on' August and September 11th. Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto, Ont. Aug. 29 to Sept. 14, 1908. Return tickets will be sold at Good going Tuesday Sept. 1st, Monday, Sept. Tth, and at $4.90 going on Aug. 29, 30, '31, Sept 5 6,8, 9 10, 11 and 12 will not be accepled on trains and 4, all tickets valid returning Toronto on or before Tuesday, 15. 1908. For full partienlars, apply to J. NANLEY, Agent, Cor. Johnson Ontario streels. Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte | Steamboat Co, LIMITED. KINGSTON, ROCHESTER, 1,000 ISLANDS. . eects Samed Strs. NORTH KING. | mmencing June 27th, leave King-| hor for and Island points daily | except Monday, at 10.15 a.m. Return. ing leave at 5 p.m., for Charlotte, N.Y., (Port of Rochester), calling at Hay of Quinte Forts. Ct ST ALETHA--TLeaves ondays para Quinte Ports, at & p.m; Full Information from JAMES SWIFT From BERT S is the only doub $3.55 and Good Feke 1,8, from Sept ts and | for .. Freight Agents, J.P. HANLEY, & - KIRKPATRICK, Ticket aganis, Ans Dyeing with Scap! Maypple Soap is the Household Dye that washes and dyes with one opera- tion. Used almost exclusively ia England, Yieidsfast brilliant colors. Dyes to any shade. No streaks And shove all-CLEANLY, SAFE, SURE. Maypole Soap roc. for Colove--isc. for Black, Frank L. Benedict & Co., Montralk clean Jane Mr. This is good, WALSH'S. My with this. Seranton."' from P. satisfied but will surely be Walsh *handles none 'l "So » | feet above sea level. Herpi-| rent. | ALLAN 525' LINE Montreal to Liverpool Corsican sails ....Aug. 21. Sept, 18. Virgifiian sails ..... Aug. 28. Sept. 25. Tunisian sails gy... Sept." 4. Oct. 2. Victorian sails «Sept. 11. Oct. 9. Rates of passage and full informas tion may be obtained from J, P. HANLEY, Agent G.T.R., or OC, 8, KIRKPATRIUK,. Local Agents, CANADA AND BRAZIL BIG RECIPROCAL TRADE IS GROWING BIGGER. Direct Steamship Communication to ang From Chnada is Badly Needed. Montreal Witness. hy That a big reciprocal trade between Canada and Brazil can be obtained if Canada cares to take advantage of the present opportunity is the news brought from Brazil 'by William T. Wright, who represents one of the largest com- mercial hotises in that country, He further says that all that is wanted to build up such a trade is a direct steam- ship service between Canada and the two countries. Mr. Wright is one of two representa- tives sent to Canada by 'La Societe Fi nanciere et Commerciale Franco-Bre- silienne,' of Sao Paulo, in the hope of | making a start not only in importing products from Canada, but also in ex- | porting Brazilian products to this coun- | try. Mr. Wright was in Montreal { yesterday, and he said that the business men of Sao Paulo knew nothing about {Canada till George H. Flint who represents ' the Canadian - Anerican Linotype Corporation, went there and began working up business, 50 far," he remarked, "we have {made two experiments in importing | Canadian goods, and while we found | that the first cost was lower than we {could get the same goods in Germany, | the net cost worked out much higher {because of the high transportation charges that resulted from the goods having to be brought to Brazil via the United States transportation lines. It {is the same with the coffee, etc., which { Canada gets from Brazil. but through { United States channels, which makes it | come dearer. A good deal of Canadian {trade with Brazil also passes through | England or Germany, which of course j Increases the cost and hinders its de- velopment, "Now let me tell you some of the openings that there are in Brazil for { Canadian manufacturers. First of all, | thére are tremendous opportunities in { Brazil for the sale of agricultural im- plements, in the manufacture of which { Canada is far advanced. When I | tell you that two-thirds of the world's { supply of coffee is grown in the states of Sao Paulo, and that despite this two-thirds of our farmers have never seen an ordinary plough, you will under- stand what an opportunity there is. an land is cultivated by laborers with { hoes, and-this despite the fact that Sao | Paulo is the most advanced of the | Brazilian states, | "Then there is a big opening for leather belting, 'also manufactured very largely in Canada, but at present shut out from Brazil through the high trans- portation charges in its passage through America. 'And thus I might go on, enumerating almost everything that | Canada produces. If only there were | direct steamship communication be- tween Canada and Brazil, the steamships carrying Capadian products to Brazil might come back. loaded up with cof- fee, cocoa, cotton, sugars, molasses, candy, bananas pineapples, tobacco, raw rubber and other articles, all of which Canada would get so 'much the cheaper. "Even American trade with Brazil is handicapped owing to the vefy unsatis- factory steamship service'-so much so that the best way to travel between the United States and both the west coast |and east coast of South America is to | go by way of Europe, crossing the At- lantic twice. If the United States suf- fers through this, how much more does Canada suffer, and how desirable it is that Canada should be independent of such a service." Mr. Wright went on to speak of the large and beautiful cities of Brazil. His own city of Sao Paulo, he re- marked, had a population of nearly {three hundred thousand, and was beautifully situated on a plateau 2,500 Like the other { big Brazilian cities, it had a good | water supply, an excellent system of { dfainage; and a. splendid trolley 'car systent.. The latter is owned by a Canadian company..whose head office lis in Toronto--the Sao Paulo Tramway { Light and Power Company, which has | the monopoly for trolley car lines and the supply of electricity, the power be- ing obtained from the falls on the Tietié river His own firm, he added, started in btsiness in Sap Paulo five years ago; dealing in hardware and all kinds of | machinery, and also. taking up sole agencies for various goods. When they commenced they sold $1,700 worth of agricultural machinery a month, They were now selling $8,000 worth a month, Similarly their sales of general mer- chandise had increased from $40,000 a month to $12,0000 a month. "I hope," he said in parting, "that Canada will wake up to her opportunis ties and prevent the milking of her trade with Brazil by the Americans The only way to do that is to provide direct steamship communication." S0 | The New "Rat." Montreal Herald. There is now a new way of stuffing the pompadour! It is cooler and *{ healthier than the present way of wear- ing. a rat of hair, human or otherwise, under one's own hair, Whoever invented it' no one knows, but her imitators are springing up all over town, She makes the "rat" of fine silk ma- line just the color of her hair. She -- {BEAUTIFUL HAIR Makes the Plainest Face Irresist- : ably Attractive. Any woman can have beautiful and luxuriant hair by using Parisian Sage, the great hair tonic and dandruff cure. Parisian Sage is the favorite hair tonie of refined people, and since its | introduction it has miet with wonder {ful success. . | If you want beautiful, lustrous hair that will be the envy of your friends go to the drug store of G. W. Ma- hood and get 4 bottle of Parisian Sage to-day and use it for a week, If a¥ the end of a week you are not satistied that Parisian Sage is the most delightiul and refreshing Hair Tonic you ever used take it back and get your money. Parisian Sage is guaranteed to cure dandruff and sstop falling hair. It costs only S0c. a bottle at G. W. Mahood's Or by express, charges pre paid, from Giroux Mig. Co., Fort Erie, 1 Ont, uses a good deal of it and into the required size, | To keep it from josing its shape and springing ont over her head she covers it with a plain piece of the maline basted together. She arranges this on her head with invisible hairpins and combs'her own hair over it. > Its advantages are these: It is not artificial. It is sanitary, for it is not heating and doesn't deaden the hair under it. It can be arranged into any shape and it doesn't fade. It gan be renewed each week and its cost 15) slight. Dangerous Opiates. Most of the liquid medicines zdver- tised to cure stomach and bowel troubles and summer complaints con- tain opiates and are dangerous. When the mother gives Baby's Own Tab- lets to her little ones she has the guarantee of a government analyst that this medicine contains no opiate or narcotic. And she has the assur- ance that no other medicine will so speedily cure stomach and © bowel troubles, if they come unexpectedly. Give the well child an occasional dose of these tablets and they will prevent sickness by clearing the stomach and bowels of offending matter. Mrs, Wil- bert Hone, Carrville, Ont., says: "1 have used Baby's Own Tablets for stomach and bowel troubles and know of no other medicine so satisfactory." Sold by medicine dealers or hy mail at 25e. a box from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Suffaget; London Punch, ["Do not the v, of our speech exhibit thg"arrogance of the sex which has usupged, etc.? But the day is even now dawning when all this will be changed."--pixtract from recent speech on{ Worfian's Rights. ] The following fragment, in the new style, anticipates the dawn above al- luded to: While the ejillulations of victory are still ringing in our ear:, and the ses, triumphant over the country's latitude --the true soarce of ihe old master- lchief--stands at the perishelioness of its glory, it is too soon to write the hertory of the countessy days when we were girled up .by only the vaguest hopes of eyomancipation, So wide- spread has now become the eweifica- tions of the system that, etc., etc. Creations Of Human Ingenuity. One of the many attractions at the Canadian National Exhibition, and the principal attraction in the indus- trial section, is the Process Building, a magnificent structure in which ake shown some thirty factories in opera- tion. There are silk weaving, manu- facturing braids, ribbons, neckties, cotton spinning, hoot making, glass cutting; weaving of scarfs, nets and seshes in all colors; weaving of quilts; manufacturing of jewellery; wheel- making and hicycle-making; gas pro- ducing, 'diamond cutting, wire weav- ing, wood carving, pattern making, dynamo construction, printing, bind- ing and lithographing and from 5 dozen to a score of other industries in full' operation, the same as in thd ordinary factories. China's Girl Wives. Chicago News. Girl children are often unwelcome in China. A terrible witness to this is a stone standing near a pool outside the city of Foochow, On it is the in- scription, "Girls may not be drowned here.¥ Poor parents often sell or give away a daughter when but a few wecks or months old, to be the future wife of a boy about her own age. The child who becomes a bride by a "rearing mar- riage" is taken home and brought up by the family of her future husband. An Englishwoman, when visiting a school, observed a bright. boy about eight years of age carrying a baby girl. She asked if she-were-his-sister; where- upon the boy looked shy and did not answer. His brother volunteered the information: "She is his wife!" Penalty Of Blood Poverty. Blood is the life, Life sets its crim- son signal in the face. If you lack the ruddy hue of health you lack life, you are inviting disease. If the face 18 pale, if the hands and feet are continually cold or there is any other ign of deficient circulation use Wade's Iron Tonic. Pills (Laxative). They are a great nerve strengthener and blood maker. In boxes, 235ec., at Wade's drug store. Money back if not satisfactory. Unteachable Folks. Victoria, B.C., Colonist. Every newspaper on the coast has repeatedly warned people not to rush to Prince Rupert looking for work or investment 3 business or business lo- cations, but they persist in going. Thos¢ who are thus stranded at the: future railway terminus have, there- fore, only themselves to blame and cannot expect much public sympathy. Why is it that the general. public is so untéachable about a matter of this kind ? ~ Making The Punishment Fit. In a certain schaol the headmaster had been watching the movements of a boy very suspiciously, who was hand- ing round sweets to his companions undgr the desk, when he called out: "What are you doing there, Jenks?" 'Nothing, sir," replied the boy. "Well, then, you shall stay in this afterngon and prepare 50 lines of Milton for me as a punishment for idleness." A German Victory. Everybody's. - "Dose Irish make me Sick, alvays talking about vat gread hghders dey are." said a Teutonic resident of Hobo- ken, with great contempt. "Vhy, at Minna's vedding der; odder nighd dot drunken Mike O'Hooligan butted in, unde me und mein bruder und mein cousin Fritz und mein frient Louie Hartmann--vhy, ve pretty near kicked him oudt of der house-" Joseph's Obituary. v Lewis, (Mo.) Journal. An old farmer near' Rolla undectook to hold a playful young bull, by the tail. His widow says Joseph was never knoyn to stick to anything more than teh minttes, ' Perils Of The Motorist. Punch. . From a notice board outside ySamdhurst National schools: "DANGER. Motorists Beware of The School Children." -the crushes it New Provinces Most Progressive _ in Policy. Canadian Courier: 4 . There has been considerable discus- sion in the West over the contract made by the Alberta and Saskatchewan governments for school readers. The contract was made with the Morang Company of Toronto and, as the time was short for delivery, they were allowed to print the first edition in New York. The agreement was attacked because thé work was not done in Canada and because it was thought to be extravagent, As to the first charge, there is no doubt that it is well that Canada should print her own .school-books. Never- the-less it is also true that these can be produced in New York or Boston more economically and mor¢ quickly than in Canada. There are Js Hete with special equipment an tter machinery who can produce the books at a speed utterly impossible here. They have case-making machines, for example, which make cases faster than twenty- five case-makers can produce them by hand. The same is true of other details of manufacture. Canadian bookbin- deries are poorly equipped and their work does pot compare with those of the United States or Great Britain. Our school-books are, generally speak- ing, vastly inferior to those made in the other two countries, As to the question of value, the two governments concerned seem to have made a good bargain. The books have been examined by the writer, who has also an intimate knowledge of nearly all the best readers, American and British, and he cannot but admit that they are in some respects the finest set of school-books yet produced. The cases are well made; each book is bound front and back with a linen hinge ; the stitching, paper and type are first-class in every respect. Mechanic- ally the books are splendid specimens of the book-maker's art. Their cost to the governments, who will supply them free, is as follows; Primer, 13.68 cents; first book, 16.53 cents; secon book, 1891 cents; third book, 23.75 cents; and fourth book, 27.36 cents. Considering the quality of the work and the number of pages in each, the price does not seem excessive. Moreover, the publisher must deliver the books free at the provincial capitals. In passing it may be mentioned that the estimated annual cost of readers for the Province of Saskatchewan is $4,000 a year. The outlay the first year will be large, but in the second, third and fourth years it should be small enough to bring the average down to this figure. On this basis, the annual cost of free school-books to all city, town or rural schools in Ontario would not be more . than $30,000 a year. If the Government paid for the preparation of the readers and the making of the first set of plates, this cost should be reduced to $25,000 a year. Toronto has long been supplying these books free at a cost of about seven cents a pupil. It will thus be seen that free readers in all public schools is not such a terrible item as some conservative and time-worn educationists would havg the public believe, : Colors As Radiators. Nearly. everybody has noticed that some colors appear to be cooler than others, but does he or she really con- sider that there is a real and percepti- ble difference between some colors and others, It is not only a difference of looks, but of actual degrees. It is quite easy to make a practical experiment for oneself to determine the truth of this statement. No special apparatus is peeded; all that is necessary is a hot sun and one of the painted signboards that are 'so numerous around town. On passing the hand over the colors white, green, blue, red and black suc- cessively, a very perceptible change will be noticed, amounting to nearly five de- grees from the cool of the white~tok the hot of the black. Of course,. this can be very easily ac- counted for in a scientific way. Its a well-known fact that some colors reflect the light more than others. White, for instance, reflects about 95 per cent. of the light thrown upon it. The heat con- tained in the light therefore passes off in a nearly like degree. The colors green, blue, red and black range down from about 75 per cent, to zero, and the heat is thrown off in like gradients. Colors, like metals, are good and bad conductors of heat, and the fact is that a person not only looks cooler in %a-. white dress, but also is cooler by sev- eral degrees than one dressed in red or black, even though the dresses are of the same material and weight. How To Remember Dates. lhe tollowmng Ines, committed to memory, give an easy method of stat- ing off-hand the day of the week of any date in 1908 :-- Just a mother's arms, my jocund Jean: A spell o'er nature's dream. The number of letters in each word represents the date of the first Satur- day in the particular month to which it corresponds; thus, "Just," for Janu: ary, has four letters, because the firsk Saturday in January is the fourth of that month; "a," representing February is the first day of that month; and so on through all the twelve months, Each word of the 12, excepting the first "a," begins with the same letter as the month .it represents. Thus, "Just" begins with "J"; "mother's" be- gins with "m" because March begins with "M," and so on all through, with the exception of "a" for February. Having obtained the dates of the first Saturdays, the date of every other "Saturday in the month is got. by the addition of the necessary number of sevens, from which it is but a step to. any - intermediate day. Jor example, to know the day on which Christmas | day falls' this year, "dream," standing for December, has five letters, so the first Saturday in December is the sth of that month; the second Saturday is the 12th; the third the 19th; the 25th, being six days more, gives Friday, six days on from Saturday. Boy Was Blameless. Cleveland Plaindealer: "Didn't I see the grocer's boy kiss 'you this morning, Martha?" "Yes'm. But he ain't to blame, ma'am. 'Txfas the iceman set him the bad example." : Complaint About The Water, If thé water you drink disagrees, causes cramps, diarrhoea or. gas, take a few drops of Nerviline three times a day. It.tomes the stomach. pre: vents bowel disorders, ajds digestion, overcomes ill-effects of bad water ond unripe fruif.. Try a 25¢ Here js the Maid with lovely eyes Of blue, like far celestial skies. She bas 501s which bewuty mar For ABBEY'S SALT keeps them a fir. Anty Drudge's Recipe for Removing Anty Drudge Well, well! What's the "little girl?" Mrs. Youngwife--'Charley's covered the table-cloth with fruit and coffee stains, and it's my very best cloth and because I spoke of it at breakfast, he slammed the door when he went to work, and he--he--he didn't kiss me good-bye." . : Anty Drudge--*'Never mind, dearie, don't ery. Get a cake of Fels-Naptha soap. It'll take every stain away with a little cold or lukewarm water." It"isn"t the wearing, but the washing that sends light clothes to the rag-bag be- fore their time. The way to stop that is t wash them with Fels-Naptha soap in cold or lukewarm water. No boiling to weaken their fabric; no hard-rubbing to wear and tear them. And Fels-Naptha won't harm the most delicate lawns or laces. Say you have a lot of white shirtwaists and things to wash. Just wet them, soap with Fels-Naptha, roll and soak for a few minutes in cold or lukewarm water. Then rub lightly, rinse and hang on the line. Easy, isn't it? And the clothes will be cleaner and whiter and sweeter than you can get them any other way. Follow directions on the red and green wrapper for using Fels-Naptha. Fels-Naptha does all kinds of housecleaning quicker end better than anything else. A Snap of a Life Time To Furnish a Home. As our Big Mid-Summer Sale is still booming. Making room for our Fall Stock everything réduced. A bargain for everybody. Lawn, | Verandah and summer goods less than cost. Pay freight. Packing free. Store open nights, at JAMES REID'S The Leading Undertaker. "Phone, 147. Authors & Cox Artificial Our Artificial Limbs are Limbs ¢ and made with five essentials constantly in ind--fightncss, strength, durability, comfort and ease. We give every atten- tion to those which are liable to wear or ~ and make them of the maximum consistent with ness. mb, not or equalled -- by any other in the Wor . = Bread of Quality 'Users of TOYE'S BREAD never com- plain of itd quality. They always find it "just right." Is this the kind your baker supplies ?- If not, try > 138 Church Be. Toronto, Est 1060 Surgical Aids to the Afflicted ' TOYE'S I